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Q&A: How to Tame a Wild Mouse

Q.

I got a new iMac, which comes with a wireless keyboard and mouse. These accessories look slick, but the mouse cursor does all sorts of bizarre jumping around on the screen. Am I doing this or do I have a feral mouse

A.

The Bluetooth-enabled “Magic Mouse” that comes with Apple’s new iMac computers can react to different finger movements you make when holding it. If the mouse seems to be performing a specific action like enlarging the view of a Web page, the device is probably responding to one of Apple’s integrated “multi-touch gestures.” (Double-tapping the top of the mouse with a finger makes it zoom in or out of the open window on the Mac’s screen.)

Apple has a guide to the various Magic Mouse gestures on its site. If you find the gestures more annoying than helpful, you can change how the mouse behaves. To do so, open the Mac’s System Preferenes icon on the Dock (or go to the Apple menu in the top left corner and choose System Preferences). Click the Mouse icon to get to the controls for mouse behavior. Adjusting the mouse’s tracking speed may also help the jumpy cursor.

The Mouse preferences box also displays the battery’s strength level. If you were not using the multi-touch gestures, a low battery may be the cause of the mouse’s erratic performance; instructions for changing the batteries are here.

If all that seems fine and the mouse is still jumpy, check the sensor on the bottom of the device for dust or debris and clean it if needed. Using the mouse in a different desk surface or on a clean mousepad may also help. Multiple Bluetooth devices too close to the Mac can cause interference, so if you have Bluetooth speakers, a headset or other wireless devices nea! rby, try turning those off and see if the mouse calms down.



Tip of the Week: Search With Google on the Go

Typing in keywords to search for information on a mobile phone can be awkward, but Google’s mobile apps for Android and iOS let you search by speaking or by pictures taken with your phone’s camera. Voice search is built into the Google Search app, which is available free online.

Google Goggles, included in the iOS version of the Google Search app and as a standalone app for Android, searches the Web to match results with the pictures you snap; photos of wine labels, logos and landmarks can often be searchable images. Google Goggles also works as a scanner with searching for product information by barcode or QR code, adding business card details to your contacts program or solving Sudoku puzzles. Google’s site has a link to download the Goggles app at and tips for using the software.



Q&A: Upgrading to Microsoft Office 2013

Q.

If I buy Microsoft Office 2010 and Microsoft Office 2013 comes out right afterwards, can I return the older version of the program for the new one

A.

In general, most stores will only accept software returned for a refund if the box is still sealed and the program has not been installed. Microsoft has an explanation of its own returns and refunds policy on its site.

The new version, Microsoft Office 2013, is expected very soon â€" possibly by the end of the month. If you need the software and just cannot wait for the newest version to arrive, however, Microsoft has an offer than allows you upgrade to Office 2013 for free even if you buy Office 2010 now.

Microsoft Office 2010 (or Office 2011 for the Mac) software purchased between October 19, 2012, and April 30, 2013, is generally eligible for the upgrade. You can fid full details on the Office 2013 offer here.



Obama Heaps Praise on Hillary Clinton in Joint Appearance

President Obama said in an interview shown Friday night that Hillary Rodham Clinton, his bitter rival for the Democratic nomination five years ago, “will go down as one of the finest secretary of states we’ve had” and added that he would “miss her” once she steps down in the coming days.

In a rare joint interview with Mrs. Clinton that he initiated, Mr. Obama piled on the praise, leading some observers to wonder if he were effectively blessing her presumed bid to succeed him in 2016 even as Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. has been positioning himself for a possible run. Aides said the interview was about her service for the last four years, not what happens four years from now.

“I just wanted to have a chance to publicly say thank you because I think Hillary will go down as one of the finest secretary of states we’ve had,” Mr. Obama told Steve Kroft of CBS News with Mrs. Clinton sitting beside him. “It has been a great collaboration over the last four years. I’m going to miss her. Wish she was sticking around. But she has logged in so many miles, I can’t begrudge her taking it easy for a little bit.”

Mr. Obama credited her with being a central player in his presidency. “I want the country to appreciate just what an extraordinary role she’s played during the course of my administration,” he said. “A lot of the successes we’ve had internationally have been because of her hard w! ork.”

The testimonial came just days after Mrs. Clinton underwent a day of tough questioning on Capitol Hill for the administration’s mishandling of security in Benghazi, Libya, where the ambassador and three other Americans were killed in a terrorist attack last September. Some critics complained that Mrs. Clinton had failed in her duties by not ensuring enough security in Benghazi, making it a “death trap,” as one Republican congressman put it.

The joint interview was an opportunity for Mr. Obama to laud Mrs. Clinton because he was not able to do so when he announced her successor, Senator John Kerry. At the time, Mrs. Clinton was sick and unable to attend the ceremony.

Excerpts of the interview were shown Friday night on the “CBS Evening News,” and a fuller version will be broadcast on Sunday on “60 Minute..”

In the excerpt shown on Friday, Mrs. Clinton acknowledged the journey the two onetime adversaries had traveled. “A few years ago it would have been seen as improbable because we had that very long, hard primary campaign,” she said.

But she added that she tells audiences overseas that, “in politics and in democracy, sometimes you win elections, sometimes you lose elections.”

“I worked very hard but I lost,” she said. “And then President Obama asked me to be secretary of state and I said yes. Why did he ask me and why did I say yes Because we both love our country.”



Rubio and Paul Embody Conservative Debate Over Foreign Policy

Senator Marco Rubio of Florida and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky are a study in contrasts when it comes to national security policy, embodying a broader debate within the conservative movement.

As Obama and Clinton Sit for Joint Interview, Some Look to 2016

The announcement that President Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton will appear on CBS's "60 Minutes" on Sunday for their first joint interview has sparked speculation about whether his one-time rival is privately his choice for a successor.

Rubio and Paul Embody Conservative Debate Over Foreign Policy

Both were propelled into the Senate in 2010 by the passion of the Tea Party movement. Both are possible contenders for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. And both are now trying to develop their commander in chief credentials through their seats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where they had high-profile opportunities this week to engage on the big issues of the moment.

But Senator Marco Rubio of Florida and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky are a stuy in contrasts when it comes to national security policy, embodying a broader debate within the conservative movement.

Mr. Rubio is challenging the strain of isolationism emanating from some grass-roots conservatives and building a reputation as an internationalist willing to deploy American power - he has advocated greater American support for the anti-Assad forces in Syria, criticized President Obama for not sustaining a sufficient American commitment in Libya and suggested that the only way to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons might be military action.

But echoing! his posture on issues like immigration, he acknowledges that he is as likely to have differences of opinion on foreign policy with his conservative supporters at home and his fellow Republicans in Congress as with Mr. Obama. He sees a valuable role for global institutions like the United Nations, supports operating when possible alongside allies, and sees foreign aid as generally delivering a solid return on investment for the United States.

“Which conservative principles are we furthering by advocating disengagement from the world” Mr. Rubio asked during an appearance last year at the Council on Foreign Relations.

“On the contrary, I think those of us who believe America has been a source of good in the world would argue that America needs to continue to play an important role in the world, as would many of our allies and even non-allies,” he said. “I’m not prepared to cede the conservative label to those who would disengage us from what is going on around the planet.”

Mr. Paul eschews the isolationist label attached to him by his association with his father, former Representative Ron Paul of Texas, whose antiwar, inward-turning stances defined his national reputation. But Senator Paul nonethe! less refl! ects the deep suspicion about global entanglements evident among libertarians and some Tea Party adherents, and in some ways is a perfect foil for Mr. Rubio’s efforts to position himself as a moderate, mainstream leader of a new generation of Republican leaders on foreign policy.

Mr. Paul questions the value of foreign aid and the need for permanent overseas military bases. He is calling for more restrictions on presidential power to wage war, opposes American involvement in Syria and is noticeably less hawkish toward Iran than many of his fellow Republicans. As the lone member of the Senate to vote against a resolution last fall declaring that Iran could never acquire a nuclear weapon, he said, “A vote for this resolution is a vote for the concept of pre-emptive war.”

Taken together, these freshmen senators are a case study in how the conservative movement remains split over how best to employ America’s power in the world.

Both are grappling with how to reconcile the aggressivenes of the neoconservatives, the fervor of the evangelicals, the warnings of overextension by fiscal conservatives and the efforts by traditional Republican “realists” to impose a more pragmatic, less ideological lens onto the party’s approach. And with seats on the Foreign Policy Committee alongside advocates of assertive American foreign policy like Senator John McCain of Arizona, they have a platform to air their views, as they did this week in hearings on the security failures that led to the deaths of Americans at the diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, and on the nomination of Senator John Kerry! to be se! cretary of state.

“Looking at the Republican Party as a whole, the center of gravity is much closer to where Rubio is,” said Robert Kagan, a foreign policy scholar whose thinking has shaped the views of many prominent Republicans, including Mitt Romney and Mr. Rubio.

“What Rubio represents is a particularly articulate defense of a position that has been central to the Republican Party for some period, certainly going back to Reagan,” Mr. Kagan said, iting Mr. Rubio’s position on promoting democratic values and projecting military strength. “Rand Paul is more of an outlier, just like his father was, but the fact that he’s chosen to be on the committee means he wants to be part of the debate and wants to run on this. It will be an interesting debate to have.”

Mr. Paul appears to be distancing himself in some ways from the political brand of his father, whose followers - mostly libertarians and Tea Party proponents of smaller government - are also the core of his own potential national political base.  Especially concerned about his reputation for not being sufficiently supportive of Israel, Senator Paul recently traveled to Israel for the first time, seeking to address concerns about his stance, in particular among evangelicals.

He backed the stance of the conservative Israeli government on settlements, and after returning , he told the conservative media outlet Breitbart.com that an attack on Israel should be considered an attack on the United States.

Mr. Paul has also sought to explain that his opposition to foreign aid is directed mostly at nations that he considers to be acting against American interests and values, including Egypt and Pakistan. He has backed tighter sanctions against Iran, even as he has protested the possibility of a rush to war. And as he showed at one of the hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee this week, he is fully prepared to score partisan points on national security issues, telling Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that he would have dismissed her over her handling of security at the Benghazi Mission.

Mr. Rubio, too, is willin to jump into the partisan fray. In questioning Mr. Kerry, he suggested that he did not see a cohesive worldview in Mr. Obama’s foreign policy. But without taking on Mr. Paul directly, he has also sought out opportunities to portray himself as willing to take on the forces in his own party that would have the United States withdraw more from the world stage.

“My role, as someone who was elected with a lot of support from a lot of people who maybe have a different point of view than I do on foreign relations, is to lead, to go to them and make these arguments and try to convince people,” Mr. Rubio said during his appearance at the Council on Foreign Relations last year. “I have an obligation, as all of us do who are involved in Republican politics and the conservative movement, to argue about what America’s role in the world should be.”

Follow Richard W. Stevenson on Twitter at @dickstevenson.


Rubio and Paul Embody Conservative Debate Over Foreign Policy

Both were propelled into the Senate in 2010 by the passion of the Tea Party movement. Both are possible contenders for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. And both are now trying to develop their commander in chief credentials through their seats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where they had high-profile opportunities this week to engage on the big issues of the moment.

But Senator Marco Rubio of Florida and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky are a stuy in contrasts when it comes to national security policy, embodying a broader debate within the conservative movement.

Mr. Rubio is challenging the strain of isolationism emanating from some grass-roots conservatives and building a reputation as an internationalist willing to deploy American power - he has advocated greater American support for the anti-Assad forces in Syria, criticized President Obama for not sustaining a sufficient American commitment in Libya and suggested that the only way to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons might be military action.

But echoing! his posture on issues like immigration, he acknowledges that he is as likely to have differences of opinion on foreign policy with his conservative supporters at home and his fellow Republicans in Congress as with Mr. Obama. He sees a valuable role for global institutions like the United Nations, supports operating when possible alongside allies, and sees foreign aid as generally delivering a solid return on investment for the United States.

“Which conservative principles are we furthering by advocating disengagement from the world” Mr. Rubio asked during an appearance last year at the Council on Foreign Relations.

“On the contrary, I think those of us who believe America has been a source of good in the world would argue that America needs to continue to play an important role in the world, as would many of our allies and even non-allies,” he said. “I’m not prepared to cede the conservative label to those who would disengage us from what is going on around the planet.”

Mr. Paul eschews the isolationist label attached to him by his association with his father, former Representative Ron Paul of Texas, whose antiwar, inward-turning stances defined his national reputation. But Senator Paul nonethe! less refl! ects the deep suspicion about global entanglements evident among libertarians and some Tea Party adherents, and in some ways is a perfect foil for Mr. Rubio’s efforts to position himself as a moderate, mainstream leader of a new generation of Republican leaders on foreign policy.

Mr. Paul questions the value of foreign aid and the need for permanent overseas military bases. He is calling for more restrictions on presidential power to wage war, opposes American involvement in Syria and is noticeably less hawkish toward Iran than many of his fellow Republicans. As the lone member of the Senate to vote against a resolution last fall declaring that Iran could never acquire a nuclear weapon, he said, “A vote for this resolution is a vote for the concept of pre-emptive war.”

Taken together, these freshmen senators are a case study in how the conservative movement remains split over how best to employ America’s power in the world.

Both are grappling with how to reconcile the aggressivenes of the neoconservatives, the fervor of the evangelicals, the warnings of overextension by fiscal conservatives and the efforts by traditional Republican “realists” to impose a more pragmatic, less ideological lens onto the party’s approach. And with seats on the Foreign Policy Committee alongside advocates of assertive American foreign policy like Senator John McCain of Arizona, they have a platform to air their views, as they did this week in hearings on the security failures that led to the deaths of Americans at the diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, and on the nomination of Senator John Kerry! to be se! cretary of state.

“Looking at the Republican Party as a whole, the center of gravity is much closer to where Rubio is,” said Robert Kagan, a foreign policy scholar whose thinking has shaped the views of many prominent Republicans, including Mitt Romney and Mr. Rubio.

“What Rubio represents is a particularly articulate defense of a position that has been central to the Republican Party for some period, certainly going back to Reagan,” Mr. Kagan said, iting Mr. Rubio’s position on promoting democratic values and projecting military strength. “Rand Paul is more of an outlier, just like his father was, but the fact that he’s chosen to be on the committee means he wants to be part of the debate and wants to run on this. It will be an interesting debate to have.”

Mr. Paul appears to be distancing himself in some ways from the political brand of his father, whose followers - mostly libertarians and Tea Party proponents of smaller government - are also the core of his own potential national political base.  Especially concerned about his reputation for not being sufficiently supportive of Israel, Senator Paul recently traveled to Israel for the first time, seeking to address concerns about his stance, in particular among evangelicals.

He backed the stance of the conservative Israeli government on settlements, and after returning , he told the conservative media outlet Breitbart.com that an attack on Israel should be considered an attack on the United States.

Mr. Paul has also sought to explain that his opposition to foreign aid is directed mostly at nations that he considers to be acting against American interests and values, including Egypt and Pakistan. He has backed tighter sanctions against Iran, even as he has protested the possibility of a rush to war. And as he showed at one of the hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee this week, he is fully prepared to score partisan points on national security issues, telling Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that he would have dismissed her over her handling of security at the Benghazi Mission.

Mr. Rubio, too, is willin to jump into the partisan fray. In questioning Mr. Kerry, he suggested that he did not see a cohesive worldview in Mr. Obama’s foreign policy. But without taking on Mr. Paul directly, he has also sought out opportunities to portray himself as willing to take on the forces in his own party that would have the United States withdraw more from the world stage.

“My role, as someone who was elected with a lot of support from a lot of people who maybe have a different point of view than I do on foreign relations, is to lead, to go to them and make these arguments and try to convince people,” Mr. Rubio said during his appearance at the Council on Foreign Relations last year. “I have an obligation, as all of us do who are involved in Republican politics and the conservative movement, to argue about what America’s role in the world should be.”

Follow Richard W. Stevenson on Twitter at @dickstevenson.


As Obama and Clinton Sit for Joint Interview, Some Look to 2016

President Obama, left, sitting for an interview with CBS President Obama, left, sitting for an interview with “€œ60 Minutes” correspondent Steve Kroft at the White House in 2011. Mr. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will give a joint interview this Sunday on the program.

President Obama has only just started his second term but already, ith the announcement that he and Hillary Rodham Clinton will appear on the CBS News program “60 Minutes” on Sunday for their first joint interview, he has set off speculation about whether his onetime rival is privately his choice for a successor.

Just five years after their epic battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, the two were to be interviewed by Steve Kroft of “60 Minutes” on Friday, just ahead of Mrs. Clinton’s last week as Mr. Obama’s secretary of state.

The White House suggested the idea that they appear together to the State Department, said David Plouffe, Mr. Obama’s senior adviser and str! ategist, who was spending his last day in the administration on Friday.

“We wanted to do a joint interview as a way of thanks on her way out, and this seemed like a good format to do it,” said Mr. Plouffe, who suggested that Sunday’s show should be “quite the event.”

“This is a really compelling story, I think, the arc of their relationship and that’s a good format to talk about it at some length,” he said. “There’s nothing circumscribed here.”

Likely to be watching is Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Obama’s loyal No. 2. More than Mrs. Clinton, who has said she has no plans beyond getting some rest, Mr. Biden has given hints of his possible interest in a third run for the presidency in 2016.



As Obama and Clinton Sit for Joint Interview, Some Look to 2016

President Obama, left, sitting for an interview with CBS President Obama, left, sitting for an interview with “€œ60 Minutes” correspondent Steve Kroft at the White House in 2011. Mr. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will give a joint interview this Sunday on the program.

President Obama has only just started his second term but already, ith the announcement that he and Hillary Rodham Clinton will appear on the CBS News program “60 Minutes” on Sunday for their first joint interview, he has set off speculation about whether his onetime rival is privately his choice for a successor.

Just five years after their epic battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, the two were to be interviewed by Steve Kroft of “60 Minutes” on Friday, just ahead of Mrs. Clinton’s last week as Mr. Obama’s secretary of state.

The White House suggested the idea that they appear together to the State Department, said David Plouffe, Mr. Obama’s senior adviser and str! ategist, who was spending his last day in the administration on Friday.

“We wanted to do a joint interview as a way of thanks on her way out, and this seemed like a good format to do it,” said Mr. Plouffe, who suggested that Sunday’s show should be “quite the event.”

“This is a really compelling story, I think, the arc of their relationship and that’s a good format to talk about it at some length,” he said. “There’s nothing circumscribed here.”

Likely to be watching is Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Obama’s loyal No. 2. More than Mrs. Clinton, who has said she has no plans beyond getting some rest, Mr. Biden has given hints of his possible interest in a third run for the presidency in 2016.



Priebus Re-elected to Lead Republican National Committee

Reince Priebus surveyed the ballroom during lunch on Thursday at the Republican National Committee winter meetings. Mr. Priebus was re-elected to lead the committee by a wide margin. Reince Priebus surveyed the ballroom during lunch on Thursday at the Republican National Committee winter meetings. Mr. Priebus was re-elected to lead the committee by a wide margin.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. â€" Reince Priebus was re-elected chairman of the Republican National Committee on Friday, overcoming divisions and tensionsin the party as he pledged to remake and restore the Republican brand before the Congressional elections next year and the 2016 presidential race.

He was elected with near unanimity to serve a second term at the helm of the Republican Party. He allayed concerns from some party officials and activists about the outcome of last year’s elections and sought re-election without serious opposition.

“We can stand by our timeless principles and articulate them in ways that are modern and relevant to our time and relatable to the majority of voters,” Mr. Priebus said in his speech. “And that, I believe, is how we’ll achieve a Republican renewal. That’s how we’ll grow. That’s how we’ll win.”

The election here on Friday during the annual winter meeting of the committee unfolded without the drama and dissent of two years ago when Mr. Priebus was elected after surviving seven contentious rounds of balloting to overtake Michael Steele, the embattled party chairman.

Mr. Priebus, 40, a former chairman of the Wisconsin Republican Party, delivered a blunt message to the party during his acceptance speech. He said that the Republican Party needed to rebuild across the country and not simply focus on the same battleground states that are at the center of every presidential election.

“There is one clear, overriding lesson from November: We didn’t have enough voters,” Mr. Priebus said. “We have to find more supporters. We have to go places we haven’t been and we have to invite new people to join us.”

In his remarks, Mr. Priebus reported to members of the committee that he had led the party out of the debt that he inherited when he took over two years ago. He said the party still needed to make strides to compete with the Democratic Party.

Mr. Priebus secured the support of the party’s major dnors and state officials, even as he appealed to the Libertarian strains of the party that are represented by supporters of Ron Paul. He fought back the possibility of a challenge from Mark Willis, a committee member from Maine, who supported Mr. Paul in last year’s presidential campaign.

Mr. Willis did not receive enough support on Friday to have his name placed into nomination. Party officials who gathered here said Republicans needed to be unified if they were going to successfully rebuild after losing the race for the White House and seats in the House and Senate last year.

In his remarks on Friday, Mr. Priebus said the party needed to improve its technology to compete with Democrats, but also focus on returning to the basics of building a strong get-out-the-vote operation. He did not talk specifically about the divisions inside the party over fiscal and social issues, but he urged Republican officials to be driven by their overarching goal: winning elections.

“Growing the p! arty to b! e more welcoming and more inclusive does not require abandoning our principles,” Mr. Priebus said. “It means renewing those principles because only they can offer the solutions to the liberal-induced problems of our time.”

Follow Jeff Zeleny on Twitter at @jeffzeleny.